Abstract

BackgroundStudies suggest an association between weight change and subsequent poor physical health functioning, whereas the association with mental health functioning is inconsistent. We aimed to examine whether obesity and change of body mass index among normal weight, overweight and obese women and men associate with changes in physical and mental health functioning.MethodsThe Helsinki Health Study cohort includes Finnish municipal employees aged 40 to 60 in 2000–02 (phase 1, response rate 67%). Phase 2 mail survey (response rate 82%) took place in 2007 and phase 3 in 2012 (response rate 76%). This study included 5668 participants (82% women). Seven weight change categories were formed based on body mass index (BMI) (phase 1) and weight change (BMI change ≥5%) (phase 1–2). The Short Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36) measured physical and mental health functioning. The change in health functioning (phase 1–3) score was examined with repeated measures analyses. Covariates were age, sociodemographic factors, health behaviours, and somatic ill-health.ResultsWeight gain was common among women (34%) and men (25%). Weight-gaining normal weight (−1.3 points), overweight (−1.3 points) and obese (−3.6 points) women showed a greater decline in physical component summary scores than weight-maintaining normal weight women. Among weight-maintainers, only obese (−1.8 points) women showed a greater decline than weight-maintaining normal weight women. The associations were similar, but statistically non-significant for obese men. No statistically significant differences in the change in mental health functioning occurred.ConclusionPreventing weight gain likely helps maintaining good physical health functioning and work ability.

Highlights

  • Studies suggest an association between weight change and subsequent poor physical health functioning, whereas the association with mental health functioning is inconsistent

  • A meta-analysis based on eight cross-sectional studies showed a dose—response association between body mass index (BMI) and poor physical health functioning [15]

  • The mean physical component summary (PCS) scores showed an inverse doseresponse association with BMI, showing that PCS decreased with increasing BMI, whereas for mental component summary (MCS) there was no such association (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Studies suggest an association between weight change and subsequent poor physical health functioning, whereas the association with mental health functioning is inconsistent. We aimed to examine whether obesity and change of body mass index among normal weight, overweight and obese women and men associate with changes in physical and mental health functioning. Obesity is a global threat to public health with the majority of adults in the OECD countries being overweight and one-fifth obese [1, 2]. A meta-analysis based on eight cross-sectional studies showed a dose—response association between body mass index (BMI) and poor physical health functioning [15]. Longitudinal studies suggest an association between obesity and poor subsequent physical, and possibly mental health functioning [9,10,11,12,13,14, 17, 18]

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